Walter Lawrence Trophy

The Walter Lawrence Trophy is an annual award made to the player who has scored the fastest century in English domestic county cricket that season, in terms of balls received (not counting wides). Hundreds considered by a panel of experts (which currently includes David Gower and Simon Hughes) to have been made against "declaration bowling" are not eligible for the award, although this restriction was not always observed in former years.

The Trophy was instituted in 1934 by Sir Walter Lawrence, a builder and cricket enthusiast from Hertfordshire, the first recipient being Frank Woolley. At this stage in its history, the criterion was the time taken to score a hundred rather than the number of balls faced. The award was made every season up to and including 1939, but in that year Sir Walter died, and for some years after World War II the Trophy was not awarded.

The Trophy was re-instated in 1966 by Brian Thornton, with the recipient now being the player who had scored the fastest England Test century in terms of balls faced, at home or away, in the calendar year. The 1970 award was made to Geoffrey Boycott for "the most meritorious innings of the England v The Rest of the World series", but in 1971 the original version of the award was restored. Since 1985, the Trophy has been decided in terms of balls faced rather than minutes spent at the crease.

University games were eligible for the Trophy until 1995 and from 2001 to 2003. Until 2007, only first-class centuries could qualify for the award, but eligibility was widened in 2008 to include limited overs cricket. Graham Napier became the first man to win the Trophy under these new conditions by scoring a 44-ball hundred in a Twenty20 match.[1] Matches involving individual university sides (i.e. UCCE matches and the Varsity Match) are excluded, although games involving the combined British Universities team are eligible.

Winners

Winners of the Walter Lawrence Trophy
Season Player Time taken For Against Venue Notes
1934 Frank Woolley 63 minutes Kent Northamptonshire Dover
1935 Harold Gimblett 63 minutes Somerset Essex Frome Gimblett's first innings in first-class cricket
1936 Leslie Ames 68 minutes England XI Indians Folkestone not a Test match
1937 Joe Hardstaff Jr. 51 minutes Nottinghamshire Kent Canterbury
1938 Hugh Bartlett 57 minutes Sussex Australians Hove After scoring 4 in the first 14 minutes
1939 Leslie Ames 67 minutes Kent Surrey The Oval
1940 to 1944: no first-class cricket in England
1945 to 1965: Trophy not awarded
Calendar year Balls faced
1966 Ken Barrington 153 balls England Australia Melbourne
1967 Basil D'Oliveira 183 balls England India Leeds
1968 Tom Graveney 174 balls England West Indies Port-of-Spain
1969 Colin Milburn 163 balls England Pakistan Karachi
1970 Geoffrey Boycott 222 balls England Rest of the World The Oval "most meritorious" innings of the series
Season Time taken
1971 Brian Davison 63 minutes Leicestershire Northamptonshire Leicester
1972 Majid Khan 70 minutes Glamorgan Warwickshire Birmingham
1973 Asif Iqbal 72 minutes Kent MCC Canterbury
1974 Garry Sobers 83 minutes Nottinghamshire Derbyshire Ilkeston
1975 Robin Hobbs 44 minutes Essex Australia Chelmsford
1976 Alan Knott 70 minutes Kent Sussex Canterbury
1977 Chris Old 37 minutes Yorkshire Warwickshire Birmingham against "declaration bowling"
1978 Gordon Greenidge 82 minutes Hampshire Glamorgan Southampton
1979 Mike Procter 57 minutes Gloucestershire Northamptonshire Bristol
1980 Viv Richards 66 minutes West Indians Glamorgan Swansea
1981 Sylvester Clarke 62 minutes Surrey Glamorgan Swansea batting at number nine
1982 Ian Botham 52 minutes Somerset Warwickshire Taunton
1983 Steve O'Shaughnessy 35 minutes Lancashire Leicestershire Manchester against "declaration bowling"
1984 Mike Gatting 79 minutes Middlesex Kent Lord's
Balls faced
1985 Ian Botham 50 balls Somerset Warwickshire Birmingham
1986 Viv Richards 48 balls Somerset Glamorgan Taunton
1987 Roland Butcher 73 balls Middlesex Sussex Hove
1988 Graeme Hick 79 balls Worcestershire Surrey The Oval
1989 Darren Bicknell 69 balls Surrey Essex The Oval
1990 Tom Moody 36 balls Warwickshire Glamorgan Swansea against "declaration bowling"
1991 Ian Austin 61 balls Lancashire Yorkshire Scarborough
1992 Matthew Maynard 73 balls Glamorgan Australians Neath
1993 Paul Johnson 73 balls Nottinghamshire Glamorgan Swansea
1994 Ken Rutherford 71 balls New Zealanders Glamorgan Swansea
1995 Chris Cairns 65 balls Nottinghamshire Cambridge U Fenner's
1996 Graham Lloyd 70 balls Lancashire Essex Chelmsford
1997 Graham Lloyd 73 balls Lancashire Leicestershire Leicester
1998 Ali Brown 72 balls Surrey Northamptonshire The Oval award shared
Carl Hooper Kent Worcestershire Canterbury
1999 Andrew Flintoff 61 balls Lancashire Gloucestershire Bristol before lunch on the first day
2000 Darren Lehmann 89 balls Yorkshire Kent Canterbury
2001 Ian Harvey 61 balls Gloucestershire Derbyshire Bristol
2002 Matthew Fleming 66 balls Kent Sri Lankans Canterbury
2003 Damien Martyn 65 balls Yorkshire Gloucestershire Leeds on the last day of the season
2004 Richard Johnson 63 balls Somerset Durham Chester-le-Street at number ten
2005 Ian Blackwell 67 balls Somerset Derbyshire Taunton On the last day of the season
2006 Mark Ealham 45 balls Nottinghamshire MCC Lord's
2007 Marcus North 73 balls Gloucestershire Leicestershire Bristol
2008 Graham Napier 44 balls Essex Sussex Chelmsford
2009 Vikram Solanki 47 balls Worcestershire Glamorgan Worcester
2010 Adam Gilchrist 47 balls Middlesex Kent Canterbury
2011 Kevin O'Brien 44 balls Gloucestershire Middlesex Uxbridge
2012 Scott Styris 37 balls Sussex Gloucestershire Hove 2012 Friends Life t20 Quarter-finals[2]
2013 Darren Stevens 44 balls Kent Sussex Canterbury
2014 Daniel Christian 46 balls Middlesex Kent Canterbury award shared
Sam Billings Kent Somerset Taunton

Notes

  1. "Napier wins Walter Lawrence Trophy". Cricinfo. 29 September 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  2. "Scott Styris hits equal third-fastest T20 ton as Sussex beat Gloucestershire". BBC Sport. 24 July 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2012.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, January 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.